Selective reading on your part
Rude?
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For some reason there are pilots that love to be a little over excited on the rudders.. I'm really not sure why. I've safetied for, and flow with, a fair amount of low-ish time GA pilots (75-200 hrs) and a handful of people love to be overzealous on their feet. I don't get it. Some flight regimes you need it (single engine multi, crab, slip, takeoff in a SE, etc.,) but you can feel some people go crazy with the rudder even when just initiating a small bank..
Apparently the criticism was because some pilots failed to understand you could overstress the aircraft with the rudder.
There's a misconception out there that below maneuvering speed you can't "break the plane" no matter what you do.. which, is just that, a misconception
The Boeing chief test pilot said that he “vehemently disagreed” with [the AAMP's suggested] aggressive use of rudder at high AOAs.
...
The McDonnell Douglas chief test pilot expressed “serious concerns and disagreement” about the rudder theories presented in the AAMP.
Which makes you wonder... why did they keep doing what they were doing? When you have chief test pilots telling you something, it's generally smart to listen to them! Why any level headed person would think it's smart to cram the rudder stop to stop over and over again is beyond me
I thought this was a good video. It's written for big jets, but still has some useful points.
..and back on topic, thanks for posting these. I'm still watching that 717 video and sending it around to local pilots
A while ago we had a thread about what we wish we'd learned more about in PPL training.. topics included flying on instruments, buying your own fuel at a fuel dock, more about how the engine works, etc., but I firmly believe that PPL pilots need more experience flying the airplane at the limits of it's envelope. This whole "first indication of stall" is not realistic.. nor is the 10 minute "set up for a power off stall" either.. stalls / spins / LOC in real life don't occur after you've prepared for it for 5-10 minutes.. there needs to be more accurate and realistic training so that if and when you do have an LOC it is second nature on recovering it
My $0.02